“Do they live out of state?”
“No. Everyone lives within twenty or so miles of here. We just never found reasons to get together. Look, I don’t want to appear rude, but …”
Tricia took the hint and stood. “I’m sorry to have troubled you.”
“Just tell me you aren’t planning on suing Monty’s estate. His illness took a toll on our finances. This house is mortgaged to the hilt. I’ve got nothing left.”
The poor woman looked on the verge of tears. And hadn’t someone—Bob Kelly?—already said David Black had threatened to sue? She wouldn’t be surprised if he’d already consulted a lawyer. After this morning, nothing he did would surprise her.
Tricia made her way to the front door, but turned to speak to Mrs. Capshaw. “Thank you for seeing me. I’m so sorry for your loss—and for all your troubles.”
Mrs. Capshaw scooped up Sarge. “I’ll probably lose my house,” she said, and sighed. She looked over her shoulder into the shabby interior of her home. “I’m sure some people would say it isn’t much of a loss, but … it’s all I’ve got left now.” She looked into the eyes of her adoring little dog. “Except for Sarge.”
Tricia figured she’d better leave before both of them burst into tears. “Good-bye, Mrs. Capshaw.”
Mrs. Capshaw closed the door. Tricia hesitated for a few moments, and soon she heard the muffled sound of the television.
As she drove back toward Stoneham, Tricia contemplated her next move. Who on earth would blame Monty Capshaw’s widow for him crashing his plane? And a woman making threats? That didn’t make sense. It couldn’t have been Elizabeth … could it? And how could one gracefully ask a woman in mourning if she’d been making threatening phone calls?
Tricia clenched the steering wheel. No, she refused to believe Elizabeth would be so crude. That said, Deborah did have two sisters. Could one of them have been upset enough to make a threatening call? Darn—why hadn’t she made a point to talk to them at the funeral? Tricia wasn’t even sure if they’d be staying in town another day or two. That was something she could ask Elizabeth.
In the meantime, she needed more information. Much as she didn’t even like to speak to Russ Smith these days, digging into Capshaw’s background might be something she’d have to get him to do for her. Being a former big-time reporter, he knew the kinds of people to ask, where to find the information she might need.
Need for what? To quench some insatiable nosiness within you? Why do you even care—let it go!
But she couldn’t let it go. It nagged at her. It wasn’t so much the manner of Deborah’s death that bothered her now but that she’d died at all.
TEN
The rain had stopped, but the day was still gloomy as Tricia prepared to leave for the day. The whole idea of letting Ginny close Haven’t Got a Clue made her feel like a new mother abandoning her newborn to a teenager’s care. She’d left a minimum of cash in the till, locking the rest of the day’s receipts in the safe. Miss Marple had a litter box in the shop’s washroom, and Ginny had agreed to feed the cat before she locked up for the night.
“Honest, Tricia, I can do this,” Ginny assured her, with more than a little irritation evident in her voice.
Tricia sighed. “I know you can. And I’m sorry. It’s not that I don’t trust you to do a good job, it’s just …”
Ginny shook her head, a wry smile lighting her face. “Haven’t Got a Clue is your baby, and—”
“Exactly! You know, it won’t take long before you feel the same way about the Happy Domestic.”
“Except that it won’t really be mine.”
“It’s the first big step in the process. I’ll bet in a couple of years you’ll be presenting a business plan for your own shop to Billie Hanson at the Bank of Stoneham.”
“Oh, sure, I was just starting to feel okay about all this new responsibility, and now you have to ruin it by reminding me that one day it’ll be me in that financial hot seat.”
Tricia wasn’t fooled by Ginny’s words. “No pain, no gain.”
Ginny smiled. “Get out of here. Your cat and your shop will be fine when you get back later tonight.”
“I’m going,” Tricia declared, and grabbed her purse from behind the counter. She headed for the door. “See you tomorrow.”
“Good night,” Ginny called.
As Tricia went out, a customer came in.
“Hi. Welcome to Haven’t Got a Clue. I’m Ginny. Let me know if you need any help finding a book.”
The door closed and Tricia squared her shoulders and marched over to the Cookery, determined not to look back.
Frannie stood behind the register, helping a customer when Tricia entered. She hadn’t stepped more than four feet into the shop before she saw Angelica pass through the door marked PRIVATE that led to her loft apartment. Angelica checked her watch. “Right on time, Tricia. Let’s move.” She turned her attention to Frannie as she neared the front of the store. “See you tomorrow.”
Frannie nodded and finished ringing up the sale.
Angelica trounced through the door without a care while Tricia meekly followed in her wake. Once outside, Angelica stopped short. “Come on, let’s go,” she urged.
Tricia caught up to her. “You make it look so easy.”
“Make what look easy?” Angelica asked shortly.
“Leaving your store—your livelihood—in someone else’s hands.”
Angelica gave a bored sigh. “Until I hired Frannie, I was stuck with incompetent boobs. She and I just clicked. Except for Darcy, who I hired out of desperation, I’ve had pretty good success.”
That was an understatement. Angelica had hired and fired five or more assistants at the Cookery before she’d found success with Frannie. Since then, she’d seemed to have mastered the art of hiring competent employees. Meanwhile, though Tricia trusted both her own and Miss Marple’s lives to Ginny and Mr. Everett—she wasn’t sure she entirely trusted them to take care of her beloved store.
She tried to put it out of her mind.
The sisters approached Tricia’s car, parked in Stoneham’s municipal lot. “I met Mrs. Capshaw this morning—widow of the pilot who crashed the plane on Thursday,” Tricia said as casually as she could, and pressed the button on her key fob.
“Don’t tell me you went and bothered the poor woman,” Angelica said accusingly.
“I did, and … I’m afraid she literally is poor. She said they were in terrible debt. Monty Capshaw had been sick with cancer for some time, but he’d been in remission. Still, his illness nearly wiped them out. She’s afraid she’s going to lose her house.”
“The poor woman,” Angelica said, and opened the passenger side door. She climbed inside.
Tricia did likewise. “I felt so sorry for her and her little dog.”
“Dog?” Angelica asked.
Tricia nodded. “What are those dinky, cutie-pie white dogs that look like toys?”
“Bichon frise?” Angelica suggested.
“Yeah, that’s the kind. His name is Sarge.”
“Sarge? Isn’t that what you’d name a German shepherd?”
“It seems to fit the little guy. He was very protective of Mrs. Capshaw,” she said, and turned the key in the ignition.
“Well, of course he was. She’s his mom. My little Pom-Pom was very protective of me, too. He would’ve given his life to save mine.” She sighed. “I still miss him every day.”
Tricia steered the car toward the lot’s exit. “She also said she’d received a couple of threatening phone calls. Who’d be so mean as to harass someone in her circumstances?”
“Let’s play devil’s advocate,” Angelica said. “David Black—or maybe Deborah’s mother. Those two had the most to gain.”
“Mrs. Capshaw said it was a woman’s voice on the phone, but I can’t believe Elizabeth could be so cruel.”
“Why not? Her daughter died. Most women will fight tooth and nail for their children.”
“So says the childless wo
man.”
“Hey, I may never have had kids, but I’ve got plenty of maternal instinct.”
“If you say so,” Tricia said, hoping her decision to agree with Angelica had been the right one. Sometimes Ange could be such a witch—arguing just for the sake of it.
Tricia approached Route 101 and slowed, tapping her right-hand turn signal. “I assume you know where we’re going.”
“Turn here and keep going. I’ll give you further instructions as we approach our destination.”
“Gosh, why would I ever need a GPS system when I have you in my front seat?”
“Just drive,” Angelica ordered.
This could be a very long evening, Tricia decided.
Angelica did know where she was headed, and very soon she’d directed Tricia to park on one of Portsmouth’s lesser-known streets. Or at least it hadn’t been known to Tricia until that moment.
The Foxleigh Gallery was housed in an old Victorian building in a not-quite-shabby neighborhood near the waterfront. The sandblasted brick and nineteenth-century architectural details lent old-world charm. The red crosswalks done in pavers were charming, but not good for three-inch heels and Angelica definitely wobbled as she walked. Tricia was glad she’d worn sensible flats, as they’d had to park a block away.
They stepped inside the brightly painted door and into the dim interior. A buzzer sounded, alerting someone that they’d entered. “Is there anything more obnoxious than that noise?” Angelica hissed.
“Shhh. Someone will hear you.”
“Do I care?”
The narrow building was completely devoid of potential customers. Its walls had been stripped back to the bare brick, with task lighting over each of the works of art that lined the walls at intervals. All but the load-bearing walls had been removed, making the space look a bit like a maze.
Tricia took a few more steps forward, cocked an ear, and stopped, with Angelica running into her back. She whirled. “Ouch!”
Angelica poked her in the ribs and nodded toward the back of the cavernous space. Footsteps forewarned that someone was approaching. As expected, it was the woman they’d seen at the funeral parlor that morning. She was still dressed in the tight-fitting black dress, but now she’d added costume jewelry to the ensemble, which made it seem more like cocktail attire than mourning wear.
“Hello. Can I help you?” the woman asked, with just the touch of an English accent.
“Yes,” Angelica said, stepping around Tricia. “We understand the gallery is featuring some of David Black’s sculptures.”
The woman studied Angelica’s face. “Didn’t I see you earlier today at—?”
“Yes, you did. I’m Angelica Miles, and this is my sister, Tricia. We were friends of Deborah’s.”
“Michele Fowler. I own Foxleigh Gallery,” she said and shook her head. “Such a tragedy. David’s handling it well, though, don’t you think?”
“Yes,” Tricia said, her voice sounding colder than she’d meant.
Michele either missed it or chose to ignore it. “How tragic that she’ll never get to see her husband’s success as an internationally famous sculptor.”
Was the woman delusional? Did she know David’s last showing was an outdoor sale on the Milford oval?
“If you’ll follow me, I’ll take you to David’s masterpiece.”
Angelica gave Tricia another dig in the ribs, stifling a laugh. “Masterpiece,” she whispered.
Michele led the way to the back of the gallery, where they passed various smaller bronze sculptures of horses with incredibly delicate legs, life-sized wooden carvings in the shape of various hats—top hats, tams, berets, and many more that Tricia didn’t quite catch, because at the back of the room stood a gigantic piece of metalwork that took her breath away.
“Triumph, by David Black,” Michele announced, waving her arm like Vanna White in front of a letter board.
Tricia gasped, her mouth falling open as she gazed up at David’s magnificent sculpture.
Several track lights from the ceiling pointed down on the formidable steel gate. It stood at least ten feet high and was at least twelve feet wide. The dull metal structure seemed to suck up the available light. From the vertical bars trailed colorful ribbons of metal, painted in playful pastels of pink, green, and blue, with just the hint of gold on the edges. Though static, the ribbons almost seemed to dance in some unseen breeze. Formidable yet … beautiful. What could have stood as a strong barrier was open and inviting.
A flush of exhilaration coursed through her, and Tricia found it hard to speak. “It’s … it’s—”
“Gorgeous,” Angelica supplied. “Who knew David had so much talent?”
“I did,” Michele said, sounding smug.
Tricia turned to face her. “It’s magnificent. Surely this belongs—”
“In a bigger, more impressive gallery than mine?” Michele challenged, turning her gaze back to the massive gate. She sniffed. “Yes, I suppose it does. I don’t imagine it’ll sell—not here in Portsmouth. But if someone from Boston sees it, it could lead to a commission. I’m sure I’m just the first stepping-stone to a very successful career for David Black.”
Angelica raised an eyebrow. “How do you feel about that?”
Michele sniffed again. Did she have allergies? “It never hurts to be the one who first discovers genius.”
Tricia found she couldn’t take her eyes off the piece. And some part of her yearned to own it. Thoughts flew through her mind. Could she get David to do a smaller scale steel gate for her own shop? Could he do something that would mesh with the store’s mystery theme? Perhaps a raven?
For a moment, she forgot how much she disliked the man and how angry he’d been when they’d last spoken.
A telephone rang from somewhere within the gallery. “If you’ll excuse me,” Michele said, and headed back toward the front of the building.
“Not bad,” Angelica said, circling the massive gate. “Not my taste of course, but it’s a pretty significant piece of art.”
Tricia frowned. “Deborah always spoke of David’s hobby as though it were a joke—a waste of time. Ginny and Frannie made fun of his yard sculptures, too.”
“Then the joke was on all of them,” Angelica said. “Do you think Deborah ever saw this piece?”
“She would’ve had to change her tune if she did.” Tricia studied the heavy black gate. Her English professor had loved to find symbolism in everything. Did this work of art represent oppression—or the shackles of marriage? But the gates were parted, with no sign of a lock. And why did the colorful ribbons seem to scream freedom?
Tricia remembered what Julia Overline had said the day Deborah died. She’d overhead a telephone call that had upset Deborah, and Julia distinctly remembered Deborah mention the word gate. Who had she been speaking to—David?—or perhaps Michele? Had she been angry or perhaps jealous of David’s friendship with the gallery owner?
The Blacks had not been a happily married couple. They fought about money. They fought about the time Deborah spent in her store, and the time David devoted to his art. Could they have fought about Michele, too?
Deborah was dead.
David was now free … to pursue his art … to quit his job … to do whatever he wanted.
For a terrible moment, the word murdered flittered in Tricia’s brain.
“What are you thinking?” Angelica asked, taking in Tricia’s vacant expression.
“A very nasty thought.”
“About David? I’m not surprised,” Angelica said.
“What if … he wanted Deborah dead? What if that plane crash wasn’t an accident?”
Angelica sighed and did a theatrical eye roll. “Oh, you do read way too many mysteries.”
“I’m not kidding.”
“Darling Tricia, you were there. You saw what happened with your own eyes. The plane ran out of gas. It crashed. End of story.”
Footsteps heralded Michele’s return.
“We’ll talk after
we’re out of here,” Tricia whispered.
“It had better be over a couple of glasses of wine and dinner,” Angelica hissed.
Michele halted in front of the sisters. “I don’t suppose you’re going to purchase anything this evening.” Not the best example of customer service Tricia had ever witnessed.
“Not tonight,” Angelica agreed, “although”—she looked beyond Michele—“I’d like to take a closer look at those bronze horse sculptures. They’re marvelous. Can you tell me about the artist?”
“He’s from Western New York and sells a lot in Chicago and Philadelphia. I can give you a brochure,” Michele said, her demeanor softening at the prospect of a potential future sale.
Tricia dutifully followed them, her mind whirling with possibilities. She could use the time during Michele’s sales pitch to think things through before she shared her thoughts with Angelica, who was likely to tear her newborn theory to pieces.
Angelica swirled the pinot noir around in her glass, took a sip, and leveled her gaze at Tricia. “You’re definitely certifiable.”
Tricia picked up her own wineglass. “I think I make a pretty compelling argument.”
“In what universe?” Angelica abandoned her glass and turned her attention back to her dinner. Pasta with sausage, artichoke hearts, sun-dried tomatoes, mushrooms, garlic, and lightly drizzled with olive oil. It smelled heavenly and tasted delicious. Tricia knew because she’d ordered the same dish, although she’d been too busy talking to eat much of the meal. Thank goodness for doggy bags—even if one didn’t own a dog.
“It all fits,” she insisted.
“Only in your warped mind.” Angelica speared a piece of pasta, chewed, and swallowed. “You know, I think I could improve on this recipe.”
“I’m serious,” Tricia insisted. “I wonder if Elizabeth might agree with my conclusions.”
“You’re not seriously thinking of sharing them with the poor woman. She just lost her daughter. Leave her alone.”
“But if Deborah was to confide in anyone, it would’ve been her mother.”
Sentenced to Death Page 10